What Water for Life means for Alberta’s municipalities

Water for Life is a provincial strategy to manage Alberta’s water – to meet a growing demand for supply and for the health of Albertans and aquatic ecosystems. The strategy was first implemented in 2003 and was renewed in 2008 with deliberate integration with the Land-use Framework. An action plan was created in 2009 to set the goals and timelines for province-wide implementation, with existing goals targeting conclusion in 2019.

Municipalities have a large role in managing water resources and aquatic ecosystems, but their efforts cannot be done in isolation. Water for Life identifies the goals, actions and timelines for managing water at a provincial level. From there, Alberta’s municipalities are a key player in this strategy.

Here is what the Water for Life strategy means for Alberta’s municipalities. As we near the targets for the current goals and actions within Water for Life, now is the time to review how effective the Water for Life strategy has been in protecting and managing the water we all need to survive.

The rising tide of water management strategies

Water for Life was the first of its kind in North America. The strategy is a comprehensive approach to managing the use of water and protecting its sources – wide in scope and large in geographic coverage.

Extreme weather events have a knack for encouraging policies that avoid (or at least mitigate) the associated damages. After a series of droughts in the early 2000s, the Government of Alberta began to develop a strategy to manage water resources throughout the province and minimize the impacts of future droughts to Alberta’s communities, industries and nature. The result was the Water for Life strategy.

To implement the Water for Life strategy, the Alberta Water Council was established in 2004. The strategy has been renewed since its initial release (in 2008) and action plans have been released in 2009 (as Water for Life: A Renewal) and 2014 (as Our Water, Our Future after a series of public consultations).

The Water for Life strategy was implemented in 2003 and has been expanded and renewed. In 2004, the Alberta Water Council was established to implement the strategy.

Water for Life was the first of its kind in North America, but the strategy reflects a growing awareness for fair and sustainable water management.

“Recent droughts and flooding have underscored that despite Canada’s total water riches, these resources are unevenly distributed – with potentially devastating results. Moreover, the recognition that aquatic ecosystems provide useful services to humans (think of the value of wetlands in filtering water or sport-fishing in streams) has changed the way we look at water.”

As Canadians’ views on water have changed, new policies and strategies need to reflect these changes while working within the existing provincial and municipal planning regimes.

Goals and approaches of Water for Life

Water for Life is centred around three goals:

Safe, secure drinking water

Healthy aquatic ecosystems

Reliable, quality water supplies for a sustainable economy

The following approaches were identified to achieve the Water for Life goals:

Knowledge and research to improve scientific understanding and inform decisions

Partnerships with citizens, communities, industry and the government

Water conservation through management plans and conservation practices

How Water for Life fits into regional planning

“It complements the province’s water and air policies— Water for Life (2003), the Clean Air Strategy for Alberta (1991) both of which have been updated, and Alberta’s 2008 Climate Change Strategy,” states the Land-use Framework. “What uses are permitted on land—or more precisely, how they are done—clearly impact adjacent watersheds and airsheds.”

Alberta’s regional plans recognize the potential for impact on water, but it is difficult to categorize what impacts are the result of a particular use of land.

“The scope of a Land-use Framework is not so easily defined,” continues the document. “Is it about extending water and sewers from towns into adjacent rural communities? Or the proximity of feedlots to populated areas? Or addressing cumulative effects of development on the quality of our air, land and water on a region-by- region basis? Suffice to say, it is a more difficult topic to contain than air and water, and the implementation of the Land-use Framework will entail ongoing public discussion.”

Alberta’s regional plans (most notably the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan) begin to link Water for Life with actionable steps to achieve the desired outcomes within the Water for Life strategy. The approaches identified within the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan were developed with the guidance of Water for Life.

“Alberta has a strong water management system in place,” reads the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan. “Since 2003, the Water for Life strategy has provided a roadmap to achieving provincial goals of a safe, secure drinking water supply; healthy aquatic ecosystems and reliable quality water supplies for a sustainable economy. To fulfill these goals, the strategy revolves around the three key directions of knowledge and research, partnerships and water conservation.”

Two strategies in the South Saskatchewan Regional Plan are founded on the Water for Life strategy:

SSRP Strategy 4.3: Continue to support the work of the Watershed Planning and Advisory Councils on watershed assessment and planning under the Water for Life strategy, in alignment with regional planning. Stakeholders are encouraged to support the work of the Watershed Planning and Advisory Councils including development and implementation of watershed management plans.

SSRP Strategy 4.11: Continue to work towards the targets set within the Water for Life strategy with all sectors demonstrating best management practices to reach overall water efficiency and productivity improvements by 30 per cent from 2005 levels by 2015.

Implementing Water for Life is a community effort

Water for Life is a water management strategy that covers a significant geographical region. To achieve the three goals – safe drinking water, protection of aquatic ecosystems and water management for development – citizens, community groups, municipalities and the provincial government are all invited to participate and contribute. Implementing the Water for Life strategy requires a community effort.

Watershed Stewardship Groups: “On-the-ground” actions and recommendations for local water management.

To aid in the implementation and evaluation of Water for Life, the Alberta Water Council collaborates with the advisory councils and with the provincial government to monitor and steward the program.

Municipalities are not left out with a role. The Water for Life Action Plan (2009) acknowledges that municipalities contribute to provincial water management but often focus on priority services: access to drinking water and wastewater treatment.

“Alberta’s municipalities are important partners in the effective management of the province’s water resources. However, Alberta’s growth has presented challenges for these partners to provide safe drinking water and environmentally acceptable wastewater. We will address these vulnerabilities by fostering municipal resiliency through sustainable waterworks infrastructure, effective operations, and preparedness.”

There are 11 Watershed Planning and Advisory Councils (WPACs) in Alberta.

Water strategies at a municipal level

Not surprisingly, a comprehensive strategy for protecting and managing water in a large geographical region has many layers. There are three main goals, from which 18 actions are derived. Alberta’s municipalities have a direct role in three of those actions.

Drinking water and wastewater

Design and implement regional drinking water and wastewater solutions.

Grants are available from the provincial government (administered by Alberta Transportation) for:

Pipelines for new drinking water and wastewater systems

Feasibility studies for regional water systems

Upgrades to water and wastewater treatment facilities

Pipelines for future extensions

The intention of the grants are to support regional water systems. Applications require at least two municipalities (or regional commissions, municipal partnerships or public-private ventures). Grants cover up to 100 per cent of the project costs.

Upgrades to water facilities

Facilitate upgrades to drinking water facilities and wastewater facilities to meet standards and, where possible, integrate with regional systems.

Support to meet drinking water and wastewater standards is available from provincial and federal funding. These funds are used to reduce infrastructure deficits, upgrade facilities and create regional systems.